Maintenance of High Inbreeding Depression in Selfing Populations: Effects of Coupling of Early- and Late-Acting Mutations
Maintenance of High Inbreeding Depression in Selfing Populations: Effects of Coupling of Early- and Late-Acting Mutations
ABSTRACT High estimates of inbreeding depression have been obtained in many plant populations with high selfing rates. However, deleterious mutations might be purged from such populations as a result of selfing. I developed a simulation model assuming the presence of mutations at two sets of loci, namely, early- and late-acting loci, and the selective abortion of embryos coupled with ovule overproduction. In the model, early-acting loci are expressed during embryo initiation, and less vigorous embryos are aborted. Late-acting loci are expressed after selective abortion ends; the surviving embryos (seeds) compete, and some of them form the next generation. If mutations are allowed to occur in both early- and late-acting loci, they increase in frequency in populations with high selfing rates in both sets of loci. However, this phenomenon does not occur if mutations occur in only the early- or late-acting loci. Consistent results are observed even if the total number of loci in which mutations are allowed to occur is the same among simulations with both early- and late-acting loci or only early- or late-acting loci, indicating that the presence of both sets of loci is the causal factor. Thus, the coupling effects of early- and late-acting mutations promote the maintenance of these mutations in populations with high selfing rates.
Sakai Satoki
遗传学植物学
inbreeding depressionselfingdeleterious mutationearly-acting locuslate-acting locus
Sakai Satoki.Maintenance of High Inbreeding Depression in Selfing Populations: Effects of Coupling of Early- and Late-Acting Mutations[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-09].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/748699.点此复制
评论